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An amazing quick and easy Thai Coconut Soup MADE FROM SCRATCH with easy to find ingredients!! The coconut milk soup broth is can’t-stop-eating-it-delicious, made as spicy or as mild as you want.
Loaded with noodles, shrimp/prawns and a variety of toppings, this coconut curry soup lends itself to all sorts of variations. Try adding tofu and other vegetables, fish or chicken. So many possibilities!
THAI COCONUT CURRY SOUP – FROM SCRATCH!!
This is one for all those times you have a hankering for a Thai curry fix, but don’t have the time or the ingredients to make a full blown Thai Red Curry from scratch.
It’s not an authentic Thai dish, as far as I am aware. But as regular readers know, I’m a bit picky when it comes to faux Asian dishes. It doesn’t have to be strictly authentic – but it needs to be truly in the spirit of said cuisine.
So while it might not be authentic Thai, it’s made with ingredients used in Thai cooking, and it really does tastes like a Thai coconut curry in soup form. Like a cross between Laksa and Tom Yum Soup (coming soon!).
It is way better than anything you can make using stock standard Thai curry pastes you find at everyday grocery stores – even if you brighten them up with fresh aromatics. And you are going to be astonished how easy it is to make. Here’s what you need – all things you’ll find at your local supermarket.
Thai Coconut Soup
Prep 8 mins
Cook 12 mins
Total 20 mins
Recipe video above. This amazing quick & easy Thai Coconut Soup is made from scratch!! Tastes like a Thai coconut curry, a cross between Tom Yum and Laksa soups. This recipe is all about the soup broth, so put whatever you want into the soup! This is the noodle soup version of this Poached Salmon in Coconut Lime Sauce.
Course: Mains, Soup
Cuisine: Asian, Thai
Keyword: Coconut Curry Soup, Thai coconut soup
Servings: 2
Calories: 665 kcal
Ingredients
1 tbsp vegetable oil
10 prawns/shrimp , peeled and deveined (Note 1)
2 garlic cloves , finely grated
2 tsp ginger , finely grated
1 lemongrass , peeled, finely grated (Note 2)
1 tbsp brown sugar
1 1/2 tbsp fish sauce (or soy sauce)
2 tsp curry powder (Note 3)
1 tsp coriander powder
2 tsp chilli garlic paste or other chilli paste , adjust to taste (Note 4)
400 g/14oz coconut milk (Note 5)
2 cups /500ml chicken broth (or vegetable)
2 tsp lime zest (1 lime)
200 g / 7 oz fresh egg noodles, prepared per packet (other noodles Note 6)
Big handful bean sprouts
Toppings / for serving:
Lime wedges
Fresh coriander/cilantro leaves
Sliced red onion (or sliced green onion), Fried Asian shallots (Note 7), sliced red chilli, more chilli paste (optional)
Instructions
Heat oil in a large saucepan over high heat. Add prawns and sear both sides until light golden (doesn’t need to cook inside). Remove onto plate.
Turn heat down to medium. If pot is looking dry, add a touch of extra oil.
Add garlic, ginger and lemongrass. Saute for 20 seconds until garlic is golden.
Add sugar and fish sauce. Stir and cook for 30 seconds – it should look like caramel.
Add chilli paste, coriander and curry powder. Stir and cook for 30 seconds.
Add chicken broth and coconut milk. Stir and bring to simmer.
Simmer for 2 minutes, then add lime zest and return prawns into broth.
Cook for 2 minutes just to reheat and finish cooking the prawns.
Serving:
Place noodles in bowl. Ladle over soup.
Top with bean sprouts and coriander, plus toppings of choice (chilli, red onion, Asian fried shallots).
Squeeze over lime juice to taste. Slurp and be happy!
Notes
1. Prawns – defrost if using frozen.
2. Lemongrass – peel reedy outer layers and just use the bottom 12cm/5″ of the stalk, the part that’s white and very pale green that can be grated.
Lemongrass paste can be used instead – stir in 1 tbsp once the coconut milk is added.
3. Curry Powder – any is fine here. I use Madras, Clives of India and even packets generically labelled “curry powder” from supermarkets. Use HOT if you like it spicy, otherwise use MILD (curry flavour but not spicy)
4. Chilli Paste – Any chilli paste is fine here. Even sriracha or other Asiany hot sauce. This is to add spiciness and adds colour to the sauce. I like using Chilli Garlic Paste, samba oelak or Chinese Chilli Paste.
5. Low fat coconut milk can be used but the sauce won’t have as good a coconut flavour and will be a bit thinner.
6. Noodles – use 200g/7oz of fresh thick noodles (like pictured) or about 180g/6oz of thinner fresh noodles. Or 120 – 150g/4 – 5 oz dried noodles (any type – rice, vermicelli, egg noodles, ramen)
7. Asian fried shallots – an essential garnish in Asian cooking! Slices of shallots deep fried until crispy then seasoned with salt. Terrific for texture and flavour, used regularly as a garnish in Asian cooking. Found in Asian stores and in the Asian aisle of supermarkets (Coles, Woolies in Australia)
8. Nutrition per serving.